Houston Chronicle

Karen Gillan is red-hot thanks to ‘Jumanji’ and ‘Avengers,’ but her true passion? Directing

- By Jen Yamato |

aren Gillan has recently transplant­ed herself away from sunny Los Angeles to much-less-sunny New York City, and she couldn’t be happier about it.

“It’s cool here! I find it really inspiring,” the actress turned filmmaker explained, FaceTiming in from her new digs on a crisp spring day. “I think I like to be a pedestrian - I don’t know how to drive - I’m really pale and I like the colder weather because of where I’m from.”

“L.A. doesn’t lend itself to any of the things that I am,” she quipped with a breezy smile. That’s just fine with Gillan, who seems to find the bright side of most things. Besides, she points out, New York is practicall­y halfway home to Scotland.

Back home is where her heart has led her, profession­ally speaking, as her acting success has dovetailed with a new itch to get behind the camera.

Gillan’s coast-to-coast move coincides with major career milestones in a year in which she’s already starred in “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle,” a December release that blossomed into one of the year’s biggest box office successes, flexing comedic chops alongside costars Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart and Jack Black — only she did it all backwards and in abbreviate­d short-shorts.

She is days away from the opening of “Avengers: Infinity War,” the Friday release in which she reprises her role of the bald, blue-skinned and surly space warrioress Nebula. Analysts already predict the latest Marvel superhero installmen­t could have a $235-million first weekend and might even score the highest box office opening of all time.

But this month Gillan is celebratin­g a more personally significan­t cinematic feat: her feature directing debut, the Scotland-set “The Party’s Just Beginning.” The scrappy drama made on an indie budget in 18 days premieres Sunday at the Tribeca Film Festival.

Gillan directs herself in the film as Liusaidh, a young Scottish woman in her 20s stuck in a tailspin of grief a year after the death of her best friend. She’s smart and capable but aimless and a touch hostile, haunted by a loss she can’t seem to communicat­e to anyone else. Drowning herself in drink and sex, she screams to be heard in a town where everyone is battling their own private demons.

It’s a project that brought her full circle back to Inverness, in the Scottish Highlands, where she grew up.

“It’s such an idyllic place to live,” she described. “It’s really picturesqu­e and beautiful and safe, so as a child you could run around without your parents worrying about you. In that respect it was just a really lovely upbringing, running around Scottish landscapes.”

Inverness is where Gillan’s story began, an only child drawn to the arts from a young age. She decided early on that acting was her path, moving to Edinburgh and then London in her teens. Her big break — her first big break, that is — came when she landed a career-making role on long-running sci-fi series “Doctor Who,” the cross-generation­al British national obsession, at the age of 21.

“It was crazy,” she recalled. “It was really naught to 100 overnight. But I’d been working for some time to get somewhere as an actress, and then to get a role like that felt like the most exciting thing that could ever possibly happen to me. So I just embraced it completely.”

STARTLING STORY

At 24, her television and film career taking off, she began writing a script, finding a kernel of inspiratio­n for a fictional story in a startling statistic she’d read about her own hometown.

“The suicide rates in the Highlands of Scotland where Inverness are higher among young men than in the rest of Scotland,” she said. “Why is this dark statistic looming over us?”

A few years later she moved to Los Angeles to star in the horror movie “Oculus,” which would jump-start her film career stateside, beginning a run of American films, including “The Big Short” and “In a Valley of Violence” and the shortlived TV series “Selfie.” She was still looking to make the personal story she’d written and intended to direct herself in when “Oculus” director Mike Flanagan introduced her to American producer Mali Elfman.

Elfman was focused on horror and genre projects at the time. A Scottish coming-of-age drama was the last thing she had intended to make. But then she read Gillan’s script.

“I knew this story,” said Elfman. “It wasn’t my story, but it was my story. It was almost every single woman’s story that I know who made it through her 20s. It felt like it knew me, it felt like it knew my friends and it felt like it knew women.”

They bonded over wine at L.A. pub the Pikey and set forth to get the movie made over the next five years, receiving endless “nos” and even more discouragi­ng responses from Hollywood’s gatekeeper­s.

“Everybody told us that this was not a story that anybody wanted to listen to,” said Elfman. “It was a female perspectiv­e and a very dark journey. But we thought that was exactly why it needed to be told, and why it needed to be told by women.”

Gillan and Elfman hustled from meeting to meeting until finally

they landed financing from newbie shingle Mt. Hollywood Films. Meanwhile, Gillan’s star profile continued to rise as what she thought would be a small role in Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” turned into something much, much bigger.

“I knew that being in a Marvel movie was going to be incredible, but my role was supposed to be small in the first movie, and I didn’t know she was coming back for the second movie,” Gillan said with a laugh. “I was supposed to do eight days of filming and that was going to be it, and then it turned into something like 20 days, and all of a sudden I was coming back for the sequel. I was like, ‘This is the greatest!’”

ACTORS’ REUNION

Being in the Marvel fold had its other useful perks. With financing in place for her modest passion project, time came to cast “Party” - scheduled for a lightning-quick shoot over the Christmas holiday break in freezing cold Scottish winter. She picked up the phone and called “Guardians” costar Lee Pace to offer him the role of Dale, a mysterious out-of-towner to whom Liusaidh finds herself drawn.

“I was sitting at the table, it was the middle of winter up here, and it was right before Christmas,” Pace said from his home in upstate New York. “I’m always up for an adventure, a kind of out of the blue, drop what you’re doing, let’s go do something fun (project) . I was very curious about what Karen was trying to make.”

In the “Avengers” universe, he plays Kree villain Ronan the Accuser under prosthetic­s and makeup.

“We were always blue when we were together!” he said with a chuckle.

Reuniting for Gillan’s film, the pair instead played the opposite: strangers who discover in each other an unexpected connection that brings their isolated lives closer together - if for a fleeting moment.

British actor Matthew Beard was cast as Alistair, the transition­ing best friend whose tragic absence haunts Liusaidh’s memories.

“I’d never worked with an actordirec­tor before and really wasn’t sure how it was going to work,” he wrote via email. “Incredibly, she was absolutely present in whichever role she was donning. She was always so completely with you in the scene but then able to immediatel­y answer a question about something technical straight after cut was called.”

For Gillan the actor, Liusaidh is a dimensiona­l role that comes rarely when one has to wait for it, and one for which she unleashes the native brogue not used in her Hollywood movies. And a wicked sense of black humor.

Her Liusaidh is driven by an elemental emotionali­sm, propelled between present and past in the film’s shifting timelines like a woman on fire. It’s a raw, unadorned performanc­e encapsulat­ed perfectly in the film’s poster image, a shot taken from a scene early in the film: a close-up on Gillan’s aggressive scowl as Liusaidh heads home after another chilly night of self-destructiv­eness and random sex, stuffing her face voraciousl­y with fries.

“There were times when I just took off all the makeup in the scenes when she was really at rock bottom. I think I’d been working for like a year straight at that point, so my skin just looked like absolute (garbage). I thought, this is perfect! I’m just going to not cover this zit,” Gillan recalled fondly of the freezing-cold night shoots she directed with a splinter crew of seven across Inverness, outside the local chips shop, on streets and bridges she knew from her childhood.

Looking back now it seems obvious to Gillan that she would come to directing; as a child running around those idyllic Scottish vistas, she cast her father in the horror movies she made with a video camera her parents gave her.

“I never really considered directing as a real career, and I’m trying to work out why that is,” she paused. As the saying goes in conversati­ons of representa­tion in Hollywood, where women directors made only eight of the top 100 movies of 2017, “If you can see it, you can be it.”

“I think that’s really true,” said Gillan. “And I had just never seen it.”

She and Elfman see progress being made for women in Hollywood, both on the studio scale and trickling down to the indie film world.

“Before, just going in the room with a female director was a thing that you had to prove,” said Elfman. “At the moment I have only female directors - and it’s not because I only work with female directors, it’s because I want to work with the best directors that have voices that I care about. Those all happen to be female directors.”

The two are developing their next feature together, a female-centric project based on Gillan’s short film “Convention­al,” in which she plays a former scream queen dealing with truly scary fans on the convention circuit. For Gillan directing again is not a question of if, but when.

After the “out of body experience” of putting “Party” together in the editing room, she might like to focus only on being behind the camera for her next feature.

“However, I did have the ultimate shorthand with myself,” she quipped. “There was no trying to get notes across, no, ‘I’m just going to try one more.’”

So her lead actress wasn’t difficult to work with?

“No,” she laughed. “She was a nightmare.”

 ?? Jay Maidment / Marvel Studios ?? Karen Gillan, who plays Nebula in “Marvel’s Guardians Of The Galaxy’ and “Avengers: Infinity War,” is now honing her directing chops in “The Party’s Just Beginning” that takes a look at Scotland’s high suicide rates. The Scottish actress is also...
Jay Maidment / Marvel Studios Karen Gillan, who plays Nebula in “Marvel’s Guardians Of The Galaxy’ and “Avengers: Infinity War,” is now honing her directing chops in “The Party’s Just Beginning” that takes a look at Scotland’s high suicide rates. The Scottish actress is also...
 ?? DN Photograph­y / Abaca Press ??
DN Photograph­y / Abaca Press

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